Harry Raimondi was featured in the June 1999 issue of MoldMaking Technology, pictured above. Harry had recently changed careers, having been a journeyman moldmaker for many years before joining the team at (then) Bales Mold Service in Downers Grove, Illinois.

Here’s the cover of MoldMaking Technology’s June 1999 issue, where Harry Raimondi became a moldmaker “centerfold.” Ah, the MMT memories!

I remember it almost like it was yesterday, but it was nearly 20 years ago now. I had just begun working as a public relations professional for Bales Mold Service (now Bales Metal Surface Solutions) in Downers Grove, Illinois, and in researching and building a list of publications to work with, I discovered MoldMaking Technology Magazine.

I had never heard of MMT before, but I was excited that there was actually a magazine dedicated to our industry, and I quickly contacted Christina Fuges to find out more. Zip forward 20 years and here I am, senior editor of MMT working alongside Christina and I could not be prouder. I also could not imagine missing the chance to call my friend Harry Raimondi at Bales to reminisce a little.

In September, Harry will have worked at Bales for 22 years. Prior to that, he was a journeyman moldmaker, working for such companies as A-1 Tool Corp., where he served his apprenticeship, Major Tool Corp. and eventually Cutco Industrial Supply, where he got his first taste of being a sales rep and consultant. He liked it. Then, in 1996, Harry joined the team at Bales. I came on the scene about two years later and that’s when we first worked with MoldMaking Technology to feature this moldmaker-turned-sales rep.

“I remember being interviewed by Mary Eck,” Raimondi says, “and when the issue came out I remember Steve (Bales, the late founder and president of Bales Mold Service) walking over to me with the magazine in his hands and saying, ‘Hey, Raimondi, you’re going to love this. You’re a centerfold!’

“I hadn’t seen the magazine yet because we only got the one copy in the mail at that time,” he adds, and he heard from several of his colleagues and co-workers who were anxious to acknowledge his newfound celebrity. “I caught a lot of sh**, basically.”

But MMT became an important tool with which to promote Bales’ services, Harry says. “Seventy-five percent of our work is still focused on molds. We were so glad to be part of MoldMaking Technology—and not just with articles, but also by participating at the Moldmaking Expo (now Amerimold), exhibiting and giving presentations,” he says. “To see where things have gone both for the magazine and for Bales over the last 20 years has been interesting. Amerimold is still the top show for us, and with the magazine has helped the company grow. I can remember walking away with 150 leads from the show. The only shows we do religiously now are NPE and Amerimold. Amerimold was without a doubt the show that got us headed in the right direction.”

As Harry and I talked, he glanced over the article about himself, pausing to say to me, “You know, Steve is quoted in here saying, ‘Bales hasn’t had a salesman in 18 years. But we’d worked with him for several years, knew his reputation and just thought it was a good fit. And we were right.’ That’s really something.”

Looking at it today, Harry says MoldMaking Technology is stronger than ever. “Back then, they needed filler so they asked me to do the article! It was fun,” he jokes. “Seriously, though, we tip our hat to MoldMaking Technology that they were able to connect with the industry and become a leading publication for the industry.”

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